Preoccupied with living my busy life, I had become lackadaisical about scheduling regular medical check-ups. It had been a few years since my last exam, but in the fall of 2001, unusual pain convinced me to see a doctor. Since early that summer, I’d been experiencing discomfort in my abdomen and back for several days every month.
My 36th birthday came and went, and I stepped up my workouts, as rigorous exercise had eradicated extreme cramps in the past. As a vegetarian for fifteen years, I never smoked or drank alcohol. Although I maintained a trim physique, these new pains returned each month and became more severe.
When I finally went to a doctor, she had initial suspicions but confirmed through an ultrasound that my pain came from what she described as “a family of fibroid tumours.” She explained that uterine fibroids were common, benign tumours of the uterus. I learned that the medical community offered several treatments for these non-cancerous tumours – some surgical, some non-surgical. After reviewing my options and discovering that fibroids could be linked to infertility (I had been unable to conceive for many years), I decided on surgery to remove them.
I underwent an abdominal myomectomy in March 2002, and my doctor removed numerous tumours (she actually lost count), including one as large as a baseball. She also extracted significant amounts of scar tissue from my uterus due to endometriosis, a condition she only discovered once she opened me up.
The frustrating thing about fibroids (besides the fact that no one actually knows what causes them) is that once removed, they often grow right back. My treatment was far from complete. Since my husband and I still wanted to have children, my doctor recommended we try to conceive for one year. After that year, she planned to put me on birth control pills, which can hinder fibroid proliferation. She said if I chose not to follow her advice, the fibroids would definitely return and I’d be in so much pain that I would be begging for a hysterectomy in five years.
I didn’t want to go on “the pill,” not just because it complicates conception, but because of side effects many women suffer while taking it. Never a proponent of prescription drugs anyway, I tried to maintain a positive outlook.
A year-and-a-half later, I still hadn’t conceived, and those familiar pains in my abdomen began creeping back each month. I had not begun taking birth control pills, as my doctor recommended, and I didn’t plan to.
Online research led me to stories about women who had undergone surgery for fibroids multiple times. I learned that tens of thousands of fibroid sufferers in Canada (and significantly more in the U.S.) chose to have hysterectomies. In fact, these benign tumours remain the primary reason for hysterectomies in the U.S., accounting for as many as 300,000 surgeries annually.
One study suggested that fibroid tumours exist in as many as 80% of pre-menopausal women, although since most of these women experience no symptoms, they simply are a non-issue.
As my research continued, my doctor’s prognosis began to sound even more grim. I learned that hysterectomies in young women bring on early menopause, and many doctors feel that such a procedure is not only extreme (negatively impacting a woman’s quality of life), but needless. Even my surgery, although deemed necessary, had been a challenging experience. A four-day hospital stay became a six-month recovery period, during which I had to battle low energy and a compromised immune system. Although I didn’t want to take birth control pills, if my tumours were in fact regrowing I couldn’t fathom undergoing the fibroid surgery a second time or having a hysterectomy. There had to be a better way.
My life changed dramatically in December 2003. While I flipped through channels on television, a cable show about diet and nutrition caught my attention. The moderator, a radiant 50-year-old woman, claimed to be living an active, medication-free life despite having the degenerative disease lupus. She shared how she maintained her health and exuberance through diet, specifically eating according to her blood type. I had heard a little about this particular eating plan before, and began to do some online research. The food intolerances, tastes, and sensitivities for people with type A blood sounded exactly like mine. I contacted my doctor to confirm my blood type, and discovered that I had guessed correctly. I was officially intrigued.
My next step seemed clear: Set up a consultation with the woman from the cable show. I met with her for nearly two hours while she outlined nutritional supplements, herbs, and a cleansing program that she felt would lessen my fibroid-related pain and bring my body into a healthy state. Among her recommendations were tumour inhibitors and female hormone regulators such as noni juice, pau d’arco, milk thistle, a topical progesterone cream, various teas, and black cohosh, as well as a regular cleansing plan that would eliminate yeast and other toxins from my body.
Within two months of following her suggestions, my pains began to lessen in intensity and duration. Throughout this process, I also became a strict vegan, eliminating all dairy products from my diet, as well as wheat and numerous foods that allegedly aggravate a type A’s sensitive digestion. Before my surgery, long before even the pains began, I had been plagued with ongoing sinus problems (mucus mostly), which sometimes woke me up at night, and occasional stomach aches following meals. After four days of eating a type A diet, my mucus and digestive pain disappeared. I was officially convinced.
Today, six years after my surgery and still in possession of my uterus, I remain free of prescription drugs and no longer suffer debilitating pain. Although I have not yet conceived, I am thankful to have found a dietary balance that fuels my body, offering vitality and a pain-free existence without pharmaceuticals. When my doctor told me that, without medication, I’d be begging for a hysterectomy in five years, I chose not to blindly accept her prognosis. Instead, I explored other options, seeking out resources to help me unearth a more natural route.
EXERCISE: I had already experienced how frequent cardiovascular workouts diminished my PMS symptoms. Regular exercise also plays an important role in overall health, increasing energy and strength, and improving muscle tone and flexibility. The benefits of staying active are well documented. Walking, biking, and countless at-home equipment options provide no-cost or low-cost fitness choices these days, making it easier to work out than ever before.
SPECIAL DIETARY CHOICES: I am thankful for my doctor and what she did for me. My surgery was needed at the time, and it began my journey into nutritional education and natural health. Food has become something not to simply please my palate, but to truly nourish every part of me. A reprogramming of the brain helped me see food and drink as a means to an end – a healthy, vibrant, disease-free body.
The names of new dietary choices that sounded so alien have become my staples. I may get teased for eating black bean hummus at family gatherings, but I’m sowing invaluable seeds into my body. Besides, I have gotten more than a few people hooked on my hummus, not to mention fruit smoothies and curry brown rice.
Nutrition experts continually warn the public about the dangers of consuming too many processed foods or those laden with preservatives, salt, refined sugars, and saturated fats. Yet even in today’s enlightened society many people don’t think or care about what’s in the food they eat.
If a dietary change can so drastically impact my fibroid suffering, imagine what simple nutritional changes could do for your body. Could such practical shifts have an impact on fibromyalgia? On diabetes? Of course, no significant dietary changes should be implemented without first consulting your physician. If I had started eating a healing diet many years ago, my fibroids may have never required surgery. I strongly challenge everyone, especially those dealing with health issues, to explore natural options, beginning with an objective examination of what you currently eat and drink.
For me, it began with changing my mindset, redefining what constituted a meal as well as “celebration foods” (anything you’d take to a party), and learning to enjoy — even love — organic, raw, nutritious foods. Greasy, fatty foods aren’t worth the hours of discomfort that follow. I’ve had the opportunity to get creative and do a lot of experimenting in the kitchen.
Upgrading my diet was not as difficult as it might seem. These days, with the internet and so many more natural food enthusiasts than ever before, finding great tasting healthy foods is easier than it was just a few years ago. There are also plenty of health-conscious restaurateurs that serve raw, living, super-charged fare. Be adventurous, do taste tests with friends, and try not to condemn grains, fish, or vegetables you may have hated in childhood. Give every food a fair chance. If you have never gone on a nutritional quest of your own, I invite you to take up my challenge and explore some of the health-enhancing foods available to you. It could very well change your life.
The following list of health items is provided with dosages that were recommended to me (general dosages for capsules, tinctures, and powders are typically found on product labels). Keep in mind, you need not implement everything mentioned in this article, and there are other natural treatments for fibroids not listed here. Talk with your healthcare provider, do some investigating, and see what works for you. Also, check for drug interactions, food allergies and intolerances, before embarking on any kind of drastic dietary shift.
Editor’s note: April Love Bailey, now age 52, is happy to report that her most recent medical exam indicates that no more fibroids have been detected.
RESOURCE LIST
Editor’s note: Those seeking alternative or holistic treatment for uterine fibroids should consult a knowledgeable health professional. Check with your local naturopath. One naturopath who we recommend is a specialist in women’s health issues. Her name is Dr. Sat Dharam Kaur, ND, based in Owen Sound, Ont. For appointments call: 519 372-9212; website is www.satdharamkaur.com
Another recommended naturopath is Dr. Verna Hunt, BSc, DC, ND who specializes in women’s health issues. Office: The Centre for Health & Well Being, 396 Pacific Avenue, Suite 201, Toronto, Ontario Phone: 416.604.8240 Visit: https://healthandwellbeing.info/conditions-treated/
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April,
thanks for sharing your story. I am a 49-year Mexican woman with a fibroid tumor looking for natural alternatives to improve my overall well being and health. Your suggestions are very helpful. I will discuss with my doctor. Regards from beautiful San Miguel de Allende, Mexico!
About 2010, my doctor ordered a Uterine Ultrasound for me at the local hospital. The results showed a very thick Uterine Wall and several fibroids as well. She told me that I would be at risk for Uterine Cancer with a thick Uterus.
She assumed that this was the result of me using topical hormones and ordered me to stop using them and there would be a second Ultrasound in 6 weeks.
So I began taking 16 drops daily of Lugol's 5% Iodine in water which is 100 mg. Within 6 weeks I reported to the same hospital and actually had the same Technician doing the Ultrasound. She said, "Wow, you've gone back to normal"
and I just smiled.
Lugol's 5% Iodine shrinks fibroids wherever they may be in the body. All my breast fibroids also disappeared.
Hello, I was very excited when I read your comment. Have you experienced any problems such as breakthrough bleeding or early menstruation while using lugol? or any other situation. Thank you in advance for your reply.
I really appreciate you sharing the tale. It motivates me to press on.